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WACEP 2019 Spring Symposium April 3‐4, 2019
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EVIDENCE BASED PEDIATRIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE:
ARE YOU PRACTICING IT?
Richard M. Cantor, MD FAAP/FACEPProfessor of Emergency Medicine and Pediatrics
Section Chief, Pediatric Emergency ServicesDirector, Pediatric Emergency Medicine Fellowship
Emeritus Director, Upstate Poison Control CenterGolisano Children’s Hospital, Syracuse, NY
IS THERE TRUTH IN ……….
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EM JOB DESCRIPTION:
“A FRONT ROW SEAT TO THE END (OR BEGINNING) OF THE WORLD”
WHAT IS “EVIDENCE BASED
MEDICINE?”
• Evidence-based medicine is the conscientious explicit and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients
• Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn’t BMJ 1996;312:71
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Work Up of The Febrile Child
BacteremiaMeningitis
Febrile Convulsions
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THE FEBRILE NEONATE
SCENARIO
• A 3 week old presents with a temperature of 38.5C for 1 day
• Normal birth history
• No sick contacts
• Clinical choices:
• Viral testing only?
• Septic Work Up only?
• Admit if labs are abnormal
• Discharge if labs are normal
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IS THIS AN EVIDENCE BASED CONCEPT?
• All infants less than 30 days with a temperature greater than 38.3 C should receive a full septic workup and admission
• Key concepts:
• You can’t trust these kids clinically
• Laboratory results may be unreliable
• The stakes are very high if you’re wrong
Pediatric Infect Dis J 2010;29: 227–232
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OBJECTIVES
• To assess the diagnostic accuracy of
• WBC
• absolute neutrophil count (ANC)
• C‐reactive protein (CRP)
• in detecting severe bacterial infections (SBI) in well‐appearing neonates with early onset fever without source (FWS)
• In relation to fever duration
METHODS
• Observational study
• Previously healthy neonates 7 ‐ 28 days of age, consecutively hospitalized for FWS for less than 12 hours to a tertiary care Pediatric Emergency Department, over a 4‐year period
• Laboratory markers were obtained upon admission in all patients and repeated 6 to 12 hours after admission in those with normal values on initial determination
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RESULTS
• 99 patients studied
• SBI documented in 25 (25.3%) neonates
• 62 patients presented had laboratory markers on initial determination
RESULTS
AROC Initially AROC at 12 Hours
CRP .78 .99
ANC .77 .85
WBC .59 .79
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CONCLUSIONS
• In well‐appearing neonates with early onset FWS, laboratory markers are more accurate and reliable predictors of SBI when performed after > 12 hours of fever duration
• ANC and especially CRP resulted better markers than the traditionally recommended WBC
PRESENT DAY NEONATAL FEVER
• ALL infants should receive
• CBC, electrolytes
• Blood, urine and CSF cultures (including HSV)
• IV Cefotaxime and Ampicillin
• IV Acyclovir
• ALL are admitted
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THE FEBRILE INFANT
Academic Emergency Medicine 2009 16: 220–225
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CLINICAL QUESTION
• What is the prevalence of occult bacteremia (OB) in well‐appearing, previously healthy children aged 3 to 36 months who present to the emergency department (ED) with fever without source in the post–pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) era?
METHODS
Children were included if they were
aged 3 to 36 months
febrilehad no source of infection
had a blood culture drawn
Discharged from the ED
Retrospective study of children presenting to an urban PED over a 3 year period
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RESULTS
ratio of 7.6 contaminants for each true‐positive
159 contaminant cultures ‐contaminant rate of 1.89%
21 true‐positives, yielding an OB rate of 0.25%
8,408 children
CONCLUSIONS
• Given the current rate of OB in the post‐PCV era, it may no longer be cost‐effective to send blood cultures on well‐appearing, previously healthy children aged 3 to 36 months who have fever without source
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WHAT IF YOU DID GET A WBC?
Pediatric Emergency Care 2015 31: 391
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CONCLUSIONS
• All well-looking febrile infants with WBC greater than 25,000/mm3 should undergo a chest radiograph unless there are clear physical findings that indicate a different etiology
• Urine culture should be considered in girls
Archives Disease of Children 2014 99: 493
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CONCLUSIONS
THE ROAD TO HELL IS PAVED WITH…….?
Viral TestingViral Testing
Viral Testing
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RSV AND FEBRILE INFANTS:
A CAUTIONARY TALE
• A positive NP aspirate for RSV in a febrile young infant <2 months essentially rules out bacteremia/SBI
• Therefore, no further testing is necessary
Pediatric Emergency Care 2016;32: 286–289
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OBJECTIVES
Determine whether there is a clinically significant association between viral study
results and risk for serious bacterial infection
Received sepsis evaluation and nasopharyngeal aspirate antigen testing
(NPAT) for RSV infection
Febrile neonates 28 days or younger
RESULTS
• Prevalence of + RSV in 387 febrile neonates was 6%
• 378 (98%) had both a sepsis evaluation and RSV NPAT
POSITIVE SBI
POSITIVE RSV 4/22 (18.1%)
NEGATIVE RSV 58/356 (16.2%)
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CONCLUSIONS
Respiratory viral infection status is not an accurate clinical
determinant in distinguishing SBI risk in
febrile neonates
Rates of + SBI are not significantly different between febrile neonates 28
days or younger with and without + RSV
J Pediatr 2018;203:86-91
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STUDY DESIGN
• Compared patient demographics, clinical, and laboratory findings, and prevalence of SBIs between virus-positive and virus-negative infants
4778 ENROLLED INFANTS = 2945 VIRAL TESTED
• 44 of the 1200 had SBIs (3.6%)1200 (48.1%) were virus positive
• 222 had SBIs (12.7%)1745 virus negative
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RESULTS
• Rates of specific SBIs in the virus-positive group vs the virus-negative group were
• UTIs (33 of 1200 = 2.8%); vs 186 of 1745 (10.7%)
• Bacteremia (9 of 1199 (0.8%) vs 50 of 1743 (2.8%)
• Negative viral status was significantly associated with SBI in multivariable analysis
CONCLUSIONS
• Febrile infants ≤60 days of age with viral infections are at significantly lower, but non-negligible risk for SBIs, including bacteremia and bacterial meningitis
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MENINGITIS
THIS IS SPINAL TAP? • When performing a spinal tap, the infant should “kiss his toes” in the fetal position
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Pediatrics 2010; 125: e1149–e1153
CONCLUSIONS
• The interspinous space of the lumbar spine was maximally increased with children in the sitting position with flexed hips
• In the lateral recumbent position, neck flexion does not increase the interspinous space and may increase morbidity
X
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Ann Emerg Med. 2017;69:610-619
METHODS
• Prospective, randomized, controlled trial in an academic pediatric emergency department (ED)
• Infants younger than 6 months
• The conus medullaris and most appropriate intervertebral space were identified and marked
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RESULTS
• 128 patients enrolled
• The first-attempt success rate was higher for the ultrasonography arm (58%) versus the traditional arm (31%)
• Success within 3 attempts was also higher for the ultrasonography arm (75%) versus the traditional arm (44%)
CONCLUSION
• Ultrasonography-assisted site marking improved infant lumbar puncture success in a tertiary care pediatric teaching hospital
• This method has the potential to reduce unnecessary hospitalizations and exposures to antibiotics in this vulnerable population
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Pediatr Emer Care 2018;34: 334–338
METHODS
• Infants < 3 months
• PEM physicians marked infants' backs at the level they would insert a needle using the landmark palpation technique
• A PEM sonologist imaged and measured the spinal fluid in 2 orthogonal planes at this marked level in lateral then sitting positions
• Fluid measurements were repeated by a second blinded PEM sonologist
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RESULTS
• 46 infants enrolled
• Ultrasound verified the presence of fluid at the marked level as determined by the landmark palpation technique in 98% of cases
• Ultrasound identified additional suitable spaces 1 space higher (82%) and 2 spaces higher (41%)
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LATERAL VS SITTING POSITIONS
CONCLUSIONS
• Ultrasound can verify the presence of fluid at interspaces determined by the landmark palpation technique and identify additional suitable spaces at higher levels
• There were statistically greater fluid measurements in sitting versus lateral positions
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FEBRILE CONVULSIONS
ONCE UPON A TIME
• All children who suffered a febrile convulsion should receive a:
• Full septic workup
• An EEG
• A CT scan
• Probable admission
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PEDIATRICS 2011 127: 389
INVESTIGATIONS
STUDIES
LP
EEG
LABS
CT/MRI
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CONCLUSIONS
• Clinicians evaluating infants or young children after a simple febrile seizure should direct their attention toward identifying the cause of the child’s fever
• Meningitis should be considered in the differential diagnosis
• For any infant between 6 and 12 months of age who presents with a seizure and fever, a lumbar puncture is an option when the child is considered deficient in Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib) or Streptococcus pneumoniae immunizations
CONCLUSIONS
• A lumbar puncture is an option for children who are pretreated with antibiotics
• In general, a simple febrile seizure does not usually require further evaluation, specifically electroencephalography, blood studies, or neuroimaging
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UTI’s
Timing of CulturesMethods of Sampling
A WORD ABOUT……UTI’S
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J Pediatr 2010;156:629-33
STUDY DESIGN
• Prospective study of 818 infants and children age 3-36 months with documented fever without source
• Following the documentation of fever from < 1 to > 5 days, bag specimens were collected for urinalysis
• The primary outcome was the yield of positive bag dipsticks by day, defined as positive for nitrates or more than trace leukocyte esterase
• The secondary outcome was positive catheter cultures on each day of fever
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RESULTS
CONCLUSIONS
• The yield of positive bag urinalyses and catheter cultures increased significantly in children with fever of 3 days or longer duration
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PEDIATRICS Volume 138, number 3, September 2016:e20160573
METHODS
• A prospective cohort study among infants <6 months needing a urine sample
• CCU samples were collected using a standardized stimulation technique. Invasive technique was performed after CCU for three specific conditions
• Determined associations between successful urine samples and 4 predictive factors (age, sex, low oral intake, and recent voiding)
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TAPPING THE SUPRAPUBIC AREA
MASSAGING THE LUMBOSACRAL AREA
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RESULTS
• 126 infants included (64 boys, median age: 55 days)
• CCU procedure was effective in 62 infants (49%; median time: 45 seconds)
• Infants 0 to 29 days; 30 to 59 days, and 60 to 89 days had more successful procedures, compared with infants >89 days
• Contamination proportion 16% in the CCU group
• not statistically different compared with the invasive method group
UTI PRESENT DAY
• Recommended culture candidates• FWLS females under age 2• FWLS males under 6 months• FWLS uncircumcised males under 1
year
• Debatable worth in first 24 hours of fever• Definitely more indicated after 3
days
• Remember a culture positive UTI in an child less than 2 years is a PYELONEPHRITIS, not a simple cystitis
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Respiratory Issues
PneumoniaBronchiolitis
TIRED OF COUGHING INFANTS AND CHILDREN?
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CID 2011 53: 617
WHO SHOULD BE HOSPITALIZED?
• Children and infants who have respiratory distress and hypoxemia
• Infants less than 3–6 months of age with suspected bacterial CAP
• Children and infants with suspected or documented CAP caused by a pathogen with increased virulence, such as community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA)
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DIAGNOSTIC TESTING
• Blood cultures should not be routinely performed in nontoxic, fully immunized children with CAP managed in the outpatient setting
• Sensitive and specific tests for the rapid diagnosis of influenza virus and other respiratory viruses should be used in the evaluation of children with CAP
• Antibacterial therapy is not necessary for children, either outpatients or inpatients, with a positive test for influenza virus in the absence of clinical, laboratory, or radiographic findings that suggest bacterial coinfection
DIAGNOSTIC TESTING
• Routine measurement of the complete blood cell count is not necessary in all children with suspected CAP managed in the outpatient setting, but in those with more serious disease it may provide useful information for clinical management in the context of the clinical examination and other laboratory and imaging studies
• Acute-phase reactants, such as the erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), C-reactive protein (CRP) concentration, or serum procalcitonin concentration, cannot be used as the sole determinant to distinguish between viral and bacterial causes of CAP
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DIAGNOSTIC TESTING
• Routine chest radiographs are not necessary for the confirmation of suspected CAP in patients well enough to be treated in the outpatient setting (after evaluation in the office, clinic, or emergency department setting
ANTI-INFECTIVE TREATMENT
• Antimicrobial therapy is not routinely required for preschool-aged children with CAP, because viral pathogens are responsible for the great majority of clinical disease
• Amoxicillin should be used as first-line therapy for previously healthy, appropriately immunized infants and preschool children with mild to moderate CAP suspected to be of bacterial origin
• Macrolide antibiotics should be prescribed for treatment of children (primarily school-aged children and adolescents) evaluated in an outpatient setting with findings compatible with CAP caused by atypical pathogens
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ANTI-INFECTIVE TREATMENT
• Treatment courses of 10 days have been best studied, although shorter courses may be just as effective, particularly for more mild disease managed on an outpatient basis
Pediatrics 2014 134:e1474–e1502
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AAP DIAGNOSTIC GUIDELINES
• When clinicians diagnose bronchiolitis on the basis of history and physical examination, radiographic or laboratory studies should not be obtained routinely
AAP TREATMENT GUIDELINES
• Clinicians should not administer albuterol (or salbutamol) to infants and children with a diagnosis of bronchiolitis
• Clinicians should not administer epinephrine to infants and children with a diagnosis of bronchiolitis
• Nebulized hypertonic saline should not be administered to infants with a diagnosis of bronchiolitis in the emergency department
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REAL LIFE TREATMENT DECISIONS
• Beta 2 Agonists
•SOME WILL RESPOND----“no one ever died from one albuterol treatment”
•Will help the infant with beta 2 agonist reversible bronchospasm
• Epinephrine (nebulized)
•May stave off intubation
AAP TREATMENT GUIDELINES
• Clinicians should not administer systemic corticosteroids to infants with a diagnosis of bronchiolitis in any setting
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Viral Gastroenteritis
Anti EmeticsManagement Protocols
TREATMENT OF VIRAL GASTROENTERITIS
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ONCE UPON A TIME
• Antiemetics were contraindicated in the treatment of viral gastroenteritis
• Compazine
• Phenergan
• Atropine
THEN ALONG CAME ONDANSETRON
Pediatric Emergency Care 2012 28:247
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RESULTS
• During the study period, 32,971 patients received ondansetron in the PED, 12,620 (38%) were non-GE patients
• The non-GE patients• older (8.3 years versus 4.3 years, p <
0.001)• had a higher average initial triage
level• 79% received ondansetron enterally• 71% were discharged home• 37% of the discharged patients
received a prescription for ondansetron
RESULTS
Discharge Diagnosisfever (15%)
abdominal pain (13%)
head injury (7%)
pharyngitis(6%)
viral infection (6%)
migraine variants (5%)
otitis media (5%)
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RESULTS
Admission Diagnosis
appendicitis (11%)
asthma (6%)
pneumonia (4%)
diabetes (4%)
DON’T FORGET THE ULTIMATE ANTIEMETIC
Positive Cheetos Sign
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Pediatr Emer Care 2018;34: 227–232
ZO PO GO
METHODS
• Evaluated a protocol prompting triage nurses to assess dehydration in gastroenteritis patients and initiate ondansetron and ORT if indicated
• Otherwise well patients aged 6 months to 5 years with symptoms of gastroenteritis were eligible
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RESULTS
• 128 (81 postintervention and 47 preintervention) patients were analyzed; average age was 2.1 years
• Ondansetron use increased from 36% to 75%
• Time to ondansetron decreased from 60 minutes to 30 minutes
• Documented ORT increased from 51% to 100%
RESULTS
• Blood testing decreased from 37% to 21%
• Intravenous fluid decreased from 23% to 9%
• There were no significant changes in ED length of stay, admissions, or unscheduled return to care
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CONCLUSIONS
• A triage nurse initiated protocol for early use of oral ondansetron and ORT in children with evidence of gastroenteritis is associated with increased and earlier use of ondansetron and ORT and decreased use of IV fluids and blood testing without lengthening ED stays or increasing rates of admission or unscheduled return to care
DON’T FORGET THE ULTIMATE ANTIEMETIC
Positive Cheetos Sign
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Abdominal Issues
Pyloric StenosisIntussusception
ABDOMINAL CRISES OF INFANCY
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ONCE UPON A TIME
• All infants with pyloric stenosis
• Had classic signs (ie “the olive”)
• Had metabolic alkalosis
• Necessitated a barium swallow
• Infants with intussusception
• Had currant jelly stools
• Had profound vomiting
Clinical Pediatrics 50(3) 192 –195 2011
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STUDY CONCLUSIONS
• Reviewed the clinical and laboratory data from cases of hypertrophic pyloric stenosis (HPS) diagnosed at their institution from 2006 – 2008
• A total of 118 patients were included in this study
• An “olive” was palpated in only 13.6% of cases
STUDY CONCLUSIONS
• This is in contrast to older studies, where more than 50% of the patients were reported to have a palpable “olive” depending on when the study was conducted
• In patients from this institution, hypochloremia was present in 23% and alkalosis in 14.4%, which are less frequent than the incidence of these abnormalities in older studies
• The reason for this change appears to be the frequent use of ultrasound
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Pediatric Emergency Care 2012 28: 842
CLINICAL SIGNS BY AGE
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Neurologic Problems
HeadacheClosed Head Injury
Pediatr Emer Care 2015;31: 6–9
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RESULTS
There were no significant differences between the 2 age groups in
proportions of children in the 3 predefined weight categories
30 males (46.8%) and 33 females (53.2%) were identified
30 prepubertal with a male-female ratio of
1:0.56
33 pubertal with a male-female ratio of
1:2
Ages ranged from 2 - 16.5 years
CONCLUSIONS
• IIH should be considered in any child with new-onset headache or visual disturbance, irrespective of age, sex, weight, or the presence of known predisposing factors
• When IIH is suspected, neuroimaging should be performed promptly to exclude secondary causes of this condition because IIH in children remains a diagnosis of exclusion
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CLOSED HEAD INJURY:TO SCAN OR NOT TO SCAN?
Lancet 2009 374: 1160
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A QUICK AND DIRTY BATTLE YOU NEED TO
WIN
THE CHILD WITH A CHI REFERRED FOR A CT
SCAN
• These kids always arrive at the busiest times
• The children (and parents) are tired and hungry
• Your Hx and PE take all of 10 minutes
• Regardless of what you tell them, THEY WANT A CT SCAN
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THE CHILD WITH A CHI REFERRED FOR A CT
SCAN
• What to say to these parents
• “There have been large multicenter studies which provide guidelines for the evaluation of CHI in infants and children”
• “This child does NOT meet criteria for a CT Scan”
• “Radiation is harmful”
• “The child will more than likely grow up to necessitate CT scanning in the future”
• “You will probably have to sedate the child to do the study”
If All Else Fails, And They Demand An MRI…..
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General Issues
Afebrile Irritability
THE IRRITABLE INFANT
• You all know the checklist:
• Intracranial mishaps
• Meningitis/ Subdurals
• Corneal Abrasion
• Rib Injuries
• Hernias
• Hair Tourniquets
WHAT ELSE?
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Pediatrics 2009 123: 841-848
RESULTS
Of the 574 tests performed, 81 (14.1%) were positive
12 (5.1%) children had serious underlying etiologies with urinary tract infections
being most prevalent (n =3)
237 patients
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RESULTSAmong children <1 month of age, the positive rate of urine cultures performed was 10%
CONCLUSIONS
• History and physical examination remains the cornerstone of the evaluation of the crying infant and should drive investigation selection
• Afebrile infants in the first few months of life should undergo urine evaluation
• Other investigations should be performed on the basis of clinical findings
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Procedures
Nursemaid’sNasal FB
SVT
COOL NEW SIGNS AND PROCEDURES
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Pediatric Emergency Care 24: 785 2008
FOLEY EXTRACTOR TECHNIQUE
Bypass Obstruction Inflate Balloon
Withdraw
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Pediatrics 2007;120;842-854
EVIDENCE YIELD (KEY WORDS)
Search Terms Results, n
Pediatric resuscitation 93
Pediatric codes 3
Pediatric and CPR 373
Family presence and resuscitation 66
Parental presence and resuscitation 7
Parent presence and resuscitation 1
Parental presence and invasive procedures
7
Parent presence and invasive procedures
1
Family-witnessed resuscitation 8
Medical-legal and pediatrics 27
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Conscious Sedation
PUTTING AN END TO PEDIATRIC PAINFUL PROCEDURES
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Annals Of EM 57:470 2011
THE GOAL: “PAINLESS”PEDIATRIC
EMERGENCY MEDICINE
68 references
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TAKE HOME POINTS
• Neonates with fever still deserve a full work up and admission
• WBC counts are NOT helpful in older infants
• Positive RSV testing does not rule out SBI in young infants
• SFC deserve no advanced testing
• Positive urine cultures increase with each day of fever
TAKE HOME POINTS
• There are standardized treatment protocols for pneumonia and RSV available in print
• No one ever died from and albuterol treatment
• Zofran is everywhere (so are Cheetos!)
• Lethargy and Vomiting = Intussusception
• Afebrile irritable young infants deserve urine testing
• All children deserve high quality pain management
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LIFE IS STRANGER THAN FICTION
“BELIEVE ME, I COULDN’T MAKE THIS STUFF UP!”
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MOST INTERESTING CHIEF COMPLAINTS
Needs a circumcision because his tonsils and
adenoids are so big
Can’t find baby’s birthmark
Placed tooth under pillow, now lodged in right ear
MOST INTERESTING CHIEF COMPLAINTS
Problem with his manlihood
Baby is afraid of his hands
Needs anus muscles checked – has been
straining
“I need a swine flu test: I haven’t been to Mexico but I
always eat at TacoBell!”
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SUSPICIOUS SOUNDING CHIEF COMPLAINTS
Fell out of infancy
Lump down in his tentacle
Needs a mentalextraction
Romantic fever
SUSPICIOUS SOUNDING CHIEF COMPLAINTS
Cereal Palsy
Sick as hellanemia
Scrap throatSwollen asteroids
Sixty-five brewster
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FAVORITE TELEPHONE INQUIRES
Hello. Is it busy? I would like to schedule an
emergency.
Do you carry breast milk?May I speak to Dr. Zithromax?
FAVORITE TELEPHONE INQUIRES
My baby stopped breathing a few times today. What time can I
bring her in?
Is it all right for a two month old to fly if he’s
constipated?
Is there such a thing as a birth control vibrator?
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FAVORITE TELEPHONE INQUIRES
I was beating my daughter with a belt and got my fingers
caught in the buckle and they’re hurting, they are
bleeding. What can I do?
Do children born with microcephaly have
headaches from their heads being so small?
Should a five year old child be wiping his own butt?
THANKS!
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